I'd have to say, that in my limited experience, that I agree with Blake here. I have 10 distinct discs right now, but I just put in an order for 2 champ teebids. My goal is to have a few of the same kind of mold so that I can really focus on learning every shot with one disc.

I completely agree with keeping the molds down. Keep It Simple Stupid was something I learned from a teacher years ago and it has stuck with me for a long time. I have four drivers, a mid and putter that will always be in the bag. I have just recently decided to start trying some of the newer, faster drivers for max D.

Hey guys, just started up and i couldn't agree more. I love just carrying around my driver and putter. Keeps me more focused rather than if i had 10+ discs to choose from. I'm loving my Leopard for and all-purpose driver, but i'm having trouble picking a putter and weight thats great at approach AND putting.

Jsw wrote:Hey guys, just started up and i couldn't agree more. I love just carrying around my driver and putter. Keeps me more focused rather than if i had 10+ discs to choose from. I'm loving my Leopard for and all-purpose driver, but i'm having trouble picking a putter and weight thats great at approach AND putting.

Guess i'll just have to borrow and test.

Search for a putter that feels good in your hands. IF it's not comfortable in YOUR hands then you won't be any good with it. Just keep that in mind when picking a putter.

Sage advice, I' just ordered a Medium S Wizard(169g) - seems to be a widely used putter at an average weight and firmness. I'll probably use it exclusively for a few rounds to learn it in and out. Then add in a mid range. Perhaps a Roc or a Shark, I tossed a 150g shark and it seemed to be easiest to throw. But i'm not sure which weight is good for mids.

rehder wrote:So is throwing DX ranchos and (2007) ontarios one mold or two, and what happens when the San Marinos come along this year?

3 molds, 3 different discs.

Exactly.

However, in my book its kind of a cheat. If you are used to beat Ranchos, you have a very good idea of how a newer Ontario will feel and fly.

Its three distinct molds for sure. However, if you throw Rocs and you don't currently have a beat Roc to put in the bag, then an Ontario Roc will be a more minimalistic choice than a Buzzz or a Stingray.

rehder wrote:So is throwing DX ranchos and (2007) ontarios one mold or two, and what happens when the San Marinos come along this year?

3 molds, 3 different discs.

Exactly.

However, in my book its kind of a cheat. If you are used to beat Ranchos, you have a very good idea of how a newer Ontario will feel and fly.

Its three distinct molds for sure. However, if you throw Rocs and you don't currently have a beat Roc to put in the bag, then an Ontario Roc will be a more minimalistic choice than a Buzzz or a Stingray.

Some may disagree, but that has been my experience.

Absolutely.

What would you say about the same disc, in different plastic? i.e Champ, Sirius , X, etc...

So, if you're going to carry multiples of a mold, having everything be the same plastic, weight and run would be the most minamilistic. To be slightly less minamilisic you could vary the weight. I believe Blake's original post assumed that 1-3 could be changed without defeating the minamilst philosophy. I've found that changing 1-3 will normally give you a slight variaion on how the disc flies, not a whole new flightpath like you normally see between mold changes.

I'm curious to hear what others think of this, this is just my first stab at it.

I completely agree. even though there are slight variations in a mold between plastics, it is essentially the same disc. The difference between a star orc and a star wraith are definitely noticable, while the difference between a star orc and a champion orc is much less. I believe that disc minimalism is a technique used to take the emphasis off the disc and put more emphasis on the shot. If every disc feels the same, it must be executed and the correct version of that disc be chosen. Also, it takes out the adjustment necessary when switching from a flat, straight drive to a sweeping hyzer.